USA TODAY International Edition

Limited shortages of meat expected

‘ Buy only what you need’: Production falls amid virus

- Kyle Bagenstose, Nathan Bomey and Sky Chadde

“I wouldn’t say the food system is breaking, but at least the meat sector is in real serious, critical condition at the moment.”

Jayson Lusk, head of the Department of Agricultur­al Economics at Purdue University

American slaughterh­ouses processed nearly a million fewer cattle, hogs and sheep in the past week than they did during the same time a year ago, marking a new low that experts say will likely increase “spot” shortages of meat at some grocery stores.

“I wouldn’t say the food system is breaking, but at least the meat sector is in real serious, critical condition at the moment,” said Jayson Lusk, head of the Department of Agricultur­al Economics at Purdue University. “The chances of there being limited availabili­ty have risen, and it’s going to depend a lot on where you live.”

Meanwhile, legal experts said President Donald Trump’s executive order Tuesday declaring meatpackin­g plants “critical” to keep open will do little on its own to stop the slide in meat production brought on by the spread of the coronaviru­s among meatpacker­s.

“It doesn’t compel meat or poultry producers to remain in production,” said Deborah Pearlstein, a law professor at Yeshiva University, and it doesn’t give employers immunity from lawsuits.

Outbreaks of the novel coronaviru­s have shuttered an alarming number of America’s meatpackin­g facilities in recent weeks, with at least 4,400 workers falling ill across 80 plants, causing 28 to close for at least one day, according to data compiled by USA TODAY and the Midwest Center for Investigat­ive Reporting.

Those numbers have risen as red meat production has dropped. Last week, meat production was down about 25% compared to the same time last year, according to the U. S. Department of Agricultur­e. On Wednesday, production was a full 42% lower than the same day last year.

A decrease in the number of hogs being slaughtere­d is driving the drop. That number fell to 283,000 Wednesday, down from more than 500,000 as recently as mid- March.

Even so, Lusk and others say, most

Americans will still be able to buy meat. Steve Meyer, an economist for Kerns & Associates in Iowa, said panic buying will only exacerbate shortages.

“We’re not going to run out of meat,” Meyer said. “Buy what you need, and leave some for somebody else, and I think we’ll all get through this OK.” Supply will depend on existing contracts between individual grocers and their suppliers. If one store has a relationsh­ip with a supplier whose plant is down, meat may go out- of- stock there. But a different grocer down the road could contract with a supplier facing no shutdowns.

“It’s kind of luck of the draw of which one you might be shopping at,” Meyer said. He recommends that customers ask their grocer when another shipment is expected or try another store.

Data show poultry availabili­ty holding steady. Retailers were 13.5% out of stock of poultry as of Monday, better than 14.4% a week earlier and a high of 25.4% on March 19 during the peak of America’s panic buying, according to Euromonito­r Internatio­nal.

Industry leaders are sending mixed messages about what to expect next.

John H. Tyson, chairman of Tyson Foods, warned of “meat shortages,” saying in a blog post and full- page newspaper advertisem­ent published Sunday that the food supply chain is “breaking” and “vulnerable.”

But Cargill CEO Dave MacLennan said Tuesday on Bloomberg TV’s “Leadership Live With David Rubenstein” that “the ability of us to produce food is still there” despite challenges for the supply chain.

“I think it’s under strain, but I don’t think it’s broken,” he said. Mike Duffy, CEO of C& S Wholesale Grocers, one of the nation’s largest distributo­rs of food to retailers, said the supply of meat, especially pork and beef, “is very challenged right now.”

Shoppers will find more retail shelves out of stock “until processing capacity is brought back online,” Duffy told USA TODAY in emailed remarks. For farmers, the out- of- whack supply chain is turning into a disaster. They are forced to consider euthanizin­g animals, including hogs and chickens, that they can’t sell to processors.

In the past week alone, USDA figures show 935,000 fewer cattle, hogs and sheep were sent to meat processing plants than over the same time period a year ago.

As a result, farmers are reportedly “attempting to slow the growth of hogs and cattle by removing certain ingredient­s in the feed,” wrote Arun Sundaram, a meat industry analyst with CFRA Research.

Most chickens only live for 38 to 42 days, said Matt Wadiak, a founder of Blue Apron and CEO of pasture- raised chicken company Cooks Venture. If those chickens have nowhere to go, they will be euthanized.

“The problem is we don’t have a diverse and resilient food system,” Wadiak said. “We have a food system that is inherently flawed, filled with cracks, extremely fragile and overly consolidat­ed.”

Savior, or paper tiger?

The meat industry appeared to receive a boost Tuesday, after Trump issued an executive order invoking the Defense Production Act and declaring meat processing facilities “critical infrastruc­ture.” However, legal experts say it’s unclear exactly how the order will prop up the meatpackin­g industry. The executive order gives the USDA under Secretary Sonny Perdue authority through the Defense Production Act, said Pearlstein, at Yeshiva University’s Cardozo Law School. But that authority is mostly limited to allowing the government to prioritize contracts, she said, not demanding new ones or forcing factories to remain open.

All eyes will be on what Perdue does next, Pearlstein said.

In a statement Tuesday, a USDA spokesman did not detail how the order will be used to keep plants open but said the agency will require that meatpackin­g companies provide written plans for how they will protect workers from COVID- 19 infections. Smithfield, one of the largest meat processing companies in the United States, issued a statement that said it believed the executive order would help it secure personal protective equipment for workers.

“Importantl­y, the company believes that the executive order will provide priority assistance in securing an ongoing supply of critical PPE, as well as aid the company in securing broader COVID- 19 testing for its employees,” the statement read.

Pearlstein said that’s plausible. “The key question now is how the secretary plans to use this power,” Pearlstein said. “Would he really prioritize getting PPE to meat packers over, say, health care workers?”

Workers at risk

At least one plant that had been expected to close this week is now remaining open.

On Monday, local health officials and workers told the Lincoln Journal Star that the Smithfield plant in Crete, Nebraska, would shut down, possibly as early as Wednesday. But on Tuesday, the day Trump signed his executive order, workers received an email saying it would remain open, leading to about 50 workers to walk off the job, according to the Journal Star.

Asked about the situation in Nebraska, Smithfield pointed to a statement it released on its website. The statement says Trump’s order “helps ensure the American people will not experience protein shortages.”

Another major company, Tyson Foods, released a statement saying it has already taken steps such as adding workstatio­n dividers and screening workers’ temperatur­es and that “the safety of our team members will remain our top priority as we work with the USDA on next steps.”

The statement did not address whether Tyson would open closed plants.

In recent weeks, a growing number of laborers in the meatpackin­g industry have raised alarms about conditions inside plants. A USA TODAY investigat­ion found that while some companies have taken measures such as installing plastic barriers and spreading out workers on production lines, many workers still feel unsafe. Meanwhile there’s been little oversight from federal work safety regulators.

Several groups, including the United Food and Commercial Workers union, now worry that Trump’s executive order will further force members into dangerous working environmen­ts.

“The White House must work to immediatel­y mandate strong, enforceabl­e safety standards in meatpackin­g plants,” a UFCW spokespers­on wrote in an email. “Those standards must include access to daily testing for all workers, personal protective equipment through the national stockpile if necessary, and paid sick leave so no one comes to work sick.”

However, legal experts noted that Trump’s order specifically directs Perdue to act in a way “consistent” with recent safe- workplace guidelines from the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Occupation­al Health and Safety Administra­tion. By following those guidelines, Perdue could head off legal challenges to the order, said Claire Finkelstei­n, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

Wadiak of Cooks Venture said workers in many meat processing plants endure tough conditions and are underpaid, leading to annual employee turnover of more than 100% in some factories. He questioned whether meat processors could remain open if nobody shows up. “How are they going to do that?” he told USA TODAY in an interview. “If the people are sick, they won’t come to work.”

 ??  ?? “We’re not going to run out of meat,” one economist says. But with slaughterh­ouses across the U. S. closing or cutting production, customers might see shortages at stores, depending on which supplier the grocer uses. LM OTERO/ AP
“We’re not going to run out of meat,” one economist says. But with slaughterh­ouses across the U. S. closing or cutting production, customers might see shortages at stores, depending on which supplier the grocer uses. LM OTERO/ AP
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 ?? AP ?? Meat production was down about 25% last week compared to the same time last year, according to the U. S. Department of Agricultur­e.
AP Meat production was down about 25% last week compared to the same time last year, according to the U. S. Department of Agricultur­e.

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